Where Are You From?

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“Where are you from?”

If we’re travelling outside the country, of course the answer is Canada. (It’s fascinating to me that Americans always say the city they’re from if we’re doing some kind of group activity. So sure of their place in the world, never doubting we’ll have heard of it).  

But, otherwise, I’ve struggled to provide an easy answer to that question.

This summer, I realized I’ve lived in Regina for 30 years, but it’s not where I’m from.

Kimberly Hall, blue sky and a canola field in Saskatchewan

I’m also not from the town where I was born.

It had the closest hospital to where my Mom, Dad and brother lived. And that town is also not where I’m from because we only lived there for a year or two after I was born.

Most of my growing up years were in a very small town in the southwest part of the province.

Red sweater girl is me.

It’s not where I would say I’m from, either. Neither of my parents are from there. My Dad was transferred, and when he was up for another transfer a few years later, he and Mom decided it was a nice place to raise a family and changed jobs so they could.

I loved my Grad dress!

My Dad was transferred to Regina my last year of university. That’s how I ended up here after university in Saskatoon. I thought I’d live there, but couldn’t find a job.  He was transferred yet again not long after that and they moved out of province, I stayed in Regina. I had a job, and the beginning of a life here. It’s home.

Kimberly Hall in front of the Saskatchewan Legislative Building
2012, the year I was a blonde…Queen Elizabeth II Gardens & Sask Legislative Bldg, classic Regina pic

But is Regina where I’m from?

I’m fascinated by people who are rooted from childhood in one very specific place. Born and raised, many for generations.

I’m not from a specific town or city or plot of land.  

So, then, while Canada seems accurate when travelling, I’ve decided to simply say I’m from Saskatchewan.

And that means I’m from…

The small town I spent all my school years, in a house my dad built on the edge of town with a wheat field just beyond our backyard.

Cypress Hills, Battlefords & Greenwater Provincial Parks, summers spent camping, other places, too, but those were the main places. I’ve camped at Cypress Hills (below) more than anywhere else because it was close by.

Seeing the first glimpse of the Hills was like approaching the Rocky Mountains from Calgary. As a kid, it was a thrill. Battlefords was close to my Mom’s side of the family, Greenwater close to my Dad’s.

It was a nine-hour drive to my paternal grandparents, on the other side of the province. About three and half hours drive to visit my Mom’s side of the family.

Measuring distance by time, not kilometres.

Is that just a prairie thing?

Hours upon hours spent on not great highways in all seasons, looking for the names of towns on grain elevators, listening to the radio (CFQC from Saskatoon), staring out the window, daydreaming.

Saskatchewan Highway

Sky. Clouds. Landscapes. Familiar landmarks.

Saskatoon was the halfway point to my paternal grandparents. As a kid going through the “big” city, past the University of Saskatchewan, sure that’s where I would go someday. And when I did, driving back and forth in my brother’s little Mazda hatchback filled to the brim with clean laundry, household things and food Mom sent back with us. There were some really cold winter drives in that little car.

A summer job through all my university years where for two of those summers, I was based in Swift Current during the week on a crew doing a corrosion survey of a pipeline.

Hot summer days spent walking through fields (canola was the worst), wearing steel-toed work boots and hard hats we couldn’t remove in case the company helicopter flying over the pipeline reported us. I don’t think we saw that helicopter even one time.

classic golden Saskatchewan wheat field

Sometimes each of us would be left in the middle of nowhere to “bring in the line”. We couldn’t leave the copper wire in the middle of a field and had to manually pull it in, walking back into the field if it got stuck on something. Sometimes I had to wait for the van to pick me up, so I would lay in the ditch on the side of a grid road and study the sky.

This was the early ‘90s, with only radios to communicate which weren’t always reliable, or the battery died. I’m not even sure I had a bottle of water. We didn’t all carry water bottles then.

The Ghost Town Trail, Castle Butte, Last Mountain Lake Bird Sanctuary, the Little Church in the Valley and all the highways, grid roads and back roads leading in all directions from Regina.

Jack and I often get out of the city to chase northern lights, sunsets and storm clouds or look for the best fields, the best ditch flowers, hoping to spot wildlife (or donkeys!) along the way.

A lot of the country around Regina is just as familiar to me now as streets and neighbourhoods in the city.

Wascana Creek in the middle of the city is our nature refuge.

All of these places and experiences are, or have been, under an ever-changing wide open sky with seasons that challenge, delight and make us adaptable and resourceful in order to survive, and thrive, here.

Saskatchewan is not a perfect place, far from it, but that’s not the point of this.

The point is that where we’re from influences who we are, how see our place in the world and how we experience the broader world around us.

For me, it means I carry a sense of sky, space and landscapes that ground me no matter where I am. The values this place encourages…resilience, creativity and adaptability show up in everything  I do, and everything I am.

Kimberly Hall walking on a grid road in Southern Saskatchewan

So, when I ask where you’re from, I’m not just asking for a town or city or plot of land.

What I really want to know is…

How does that place live in you?


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7 responses to “Where Are You From?”

  1. I grew up in Brandon, Manitoba. By every measure, I had a wonderful childhood. Moved to Winnipeg for my higher education. Again, all good. But after returning to Brandon to assume a job at the local newspaper as photographer which de-materialized forcing me to take a job selling cameras, film and processing at the local K-Mart. Slowly going nuts. So much so, that when the opportunity arose, I lied though my teeth and got a job as a film cameraman at a TV station in Swift Current, SK. I took the job over the phone, and promptly called my friend who worked at Brandon’s television station, CKX-TV to show me how to load a movie camera!!! He responded, “What kind of camera?” Oh crap, didn’t think of that. Well, show me how to load whatever kind of camera you use and I will cross my fingers they also have. They did not.

    That was 52 years ago. Saskatchewan gave me everything. My entire career happened because I was here. It took me around the world… three times! It instilled in me, a work-ethic unique to SK. Perhaps born out of the depression, this province knows good times and bad and knows that hard work is never a bad strategy for success.

    I don’t know when exactly I stopped answering the question, “where are you from” saying “Well I was born in Manitoba..” to simply, “Saskatchewan”.

  2. Love this, thanks for sharing Tom!

  3. I am from working class Regina, the streets not far from the refinery where we ran barefoot over hot pavement, the small town of my grandparents, the farms of their parents, the steppes of France, the opulent old church where mass was said in Latin. The garden was my playground, the poplar trees my sky, the mud my modeling clay. I am German prayer books and British wit. I am Prairie dust and sage. Th Qu’Appelle Valley represents the beauty of this place and the history I wish I’d known. Still, each summer, I feel the need to take at least one dip in a lake – a Saskatchewan lake, and pick THE berry.

    1. Alice, this is beautiful!

  4. Wow what a great post! From America lol but truly one of those dyed in the wool New Englanders’ 🙂
    My sense of place is so engrained within me that as I traveled through the US in a big rig and through most of your countries provinces, as hard as the work was and as gorgeous as all the places I travelled through were, I could not wait to get back up here. New England is a place where most truckers hated to travel to which always allowed for me getting a load back home.

  5. Thank you, and thank you for sharing!

  6. You embody what I think of as a prairie girl! A sense of place is so important to our identity and yet we rarely give it much thought.

    Despite the fact that I’ve lived most of my life in a big city, I’m from the cold, Atlantic shores of England. I never feel more “at home” than I do looking out over a giant expanse of water and hearing the waves, and seagulls, and feeling that biting salty, wind.

Leave a reply to Caroline@retiredandnowwhat.ca Cancel reply

Hi, I’m Kim.

Kimberly Hall bright flower background in Morcote, Swizterland

I’m an ICF Certified Coach who helps people turn challenging chapters in their life and career into vibrant new beginnings.

A quiet leader, creative soul and nature-inspired prairie girl at heart, I live in Regina, Saskatchewan and connect with clients from across Canada virtually.

I’ve been sharing my photography and thoughts here since 2012.